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AUTUMN AT TANDY HILLS (all photos courtesy by Don Young)

Autumn brings a cavalcade of color and beauty at Tandy Hills Natural Area, and the park’s number one supporter Don Young captured the season on his camera.

Young has made friends and enemies during his decade-long fight to more tightly regulate gas drilling inside city limits.

But he’s made mostly friends galore with his efforts to clean up and maintain Tandy Hills and attract more visitors who appreciate its uniqueness.

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Before Young and Friends of Tandy Hills Natural Area got involved, the 160 acres of large rolling hills near I-30 and Oakland Boulevard had become neglected, with residents using it as a dumping ground for everything from old furniture to building supplies to just plain old trash.

And four-wheeler enthusiasts were taking over what was supposed to be a natural area.

Those problems are mostly gone now.

In 2013 alone, the Friends of Tandy Hills helped establish an outdoor classroom with a group of Boy Scouts led by Eagle Scout Michael Fazi. Another outdoor classroom is in the works.

Fort Worth school kids attended spring and fall field trips.

The Friends hired an independent consultant to work with city parks staff on improving the walking trails.

The 2013 Green Source DFW Environmental Leadership Award for Grass Roots Non-profit Organizations went to the Friends of Tandy Hills, and the natural area won second place in the Red Tricycle Most Awesome Family Hiking Trails awards.

Fort Worth Weekly named Tandy Hills as Best Green Space in Tarrant County in our 2013 Best Of  issue.

And the Friends of Tandy Hills also received a grant from the Fort Worth Audubon Society to enhance its Kids on the Prairie program.

Fort Worth owes Friends of Tandy Hills a slap on the back.

1 COMMENT

  1. Good to see this!

    Nice to know there are still sensible people in this country who recognize how very little of our once rich natural heritage we have left, and how important it is to conserve those small fragments. Not many people these days know what a prairie is, and they grow up thinking lawns are “natural”.

    Hoping Don Young and Tandy Hills will help to continue turning that tide.

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